Categories
Gene

CFTR

Cystic Fibrosis

It is the responsibility of the ordering physician to ensure that informed consent has been obtained from the patient/legal guardian before ordering genetic testing. Please review the following Pre-Test Counselling Information with your patient before requesting any of our genetic tests.

Clinical Features

Cystic fibrosis (CF) classically presents in infancy with clinical features that include chronic, debilitating lung infections and pancreatic insufficiency causing dietary malabsorption.

CFTR-related disorders (CFTR-RD) are defined as clinical entities associated with CFTR dysfunction that do not fulfill the diagnostic criteria for CF. This term has been ascribed to congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens (CBAVD), recurrent pancreatitis, and disseminated bronchiectasis (PMID: 21658649). It is recommended that individuals with suspected CFTR-RD should have CFTR genetic testing performed in conjunction with sweat testing.

Genetics

CF and CFTR-RD are autosomal recessive disorders caused by pathogenic variants in the CFTR gene, which encodes a chloride ion channel in epithelial cells. Over 2,000 different variants have been identified in CFTR; not all cause clinical symptoms and most are rare, with the exception of the CF-causing variant F508del which comprises approximately 70% of CF-causing alleles in individuals of Northern European ancestry.

Indications for Testing

  1. Confirmation of diagnosis: The sweat chloride test is the gold standard test for confirming a diagnosis of cystic fibrosis (CF), and is recommended prior to or in conjunction with genetic testing in the investigation of a CFTR related disorder (CFTR-RD), depending on the clinical presentation.  Therefore, genetic testing should generally only be performed following or in conjunction with sweat testing except when:
    1. A sweat chloride test is not easily obtained (e.g., newborn with meconium ileus) OR
    2. A male has documented evidence of CBAVD and his partner is a known carrier of a CF-causing variant.
  2. Carrier testing:
    1. Adults whose CF carrier risk due to a personal family history is greater than that of the general population OR their partner has a family history and CF carrier risk greater than that of the general population.
    2. Parents of a pregnancy where echogenic bowel has been detected on fetal ultrasound AND both of the parents are of an ancestry where the carrier frequency of CF is high and the detection rate of the assay is high (generally this applies to individuals of Northern-European ancestry or Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry).
  3. Prenatal testing (prenatal diagnosis requests are not normally accepted from physicians other than Medical Geneticists):
    1. Pregnancies known to be at risk of CF AND the CF-causing variants segregating in the parents are known. 
  4. Newborn screening:
    1. As part of the BC Newborn Screening Program, infants with an elevated immunoreactive trypsinogen (IRT) will undergo CFTR molecular genetic testing. These results are incorporated into the patient’s newborn screening report.

Contraindications

  1. Population-based carrier screening for the purposes of reproductive planning is not covered by Health Insurance BC (BC MSP).
  2. Testing of individuals with infertility who do not meet clinical criteria for CFTR-related CBAVD is not covered by Health Insurance BC (BC MSP)

Description of this Assay

One hundred and thirty (130) variants classified as CF-causing by the CFTR2 project are assessed using the MiSeqDx Cystic Fibrosis 139-Variant Assay (Illumina, Inc).   The length of the poly-T tract of intron 8 is reported according to published guidelines.  

The list of variants and the associated quality metrics are available here. 

If the clinical suspicion of CF is high, and two CF-causing variants are not identified by the targeted 130 variant assay, an expanded panel of variants or full gene sequencing may be performed; the clinical report methodology will indicate the analysis performed.

The list of expanded panel variants and the associated quality metrics are available here.

The target regions covered by full gene sequencing and the associated assay quality metrics are available here.

Sensitivity and Limitations

The detection rate of each of the CF assays varies depending on the individual’s ancestry.  The 130 variant, expanded panel, and full gene sequencing assays each account for approximately 95%, 96%, and 99% of CF-causing alleles in a CFTR2 cohort of classic CF patients; these individuals are primarily of Northern European ancestry. Therefore, following a negative test, there remains the possibility that an individual has a CFTR pathogenic variant not included in the assay (i.e. a residual risk).

With the exception of CFTRdele2,3 and CFTRdele22,23, these assays do not detect copy number variations involving the CFTR gene, and may not detect all insertions or deletions greater than 5 base pairs; in some clinical contexts it may be appropriate to consider pursuing funding for CFTR  deletion/duplication analysis (MLPA) to be performed in an out-of-province laboratory. Please see the Out of Province Testing Protocol for further information.

Turnaround Time

Routine

3 weeks

Pregnancy-related/Prenatal

3 weeks

Specimen Requirements

Blood: 4 mL EDTA is optimal (Minimum: 1 mL EDTA)
DNA: 100 μL at 200 ng/μL is optimal (Minimum: 30 μL at 200 ng/μL)

Label each sample with three patient identifiers; preferably patient name, PHN, and date of birth and ship to the address below. Samples should be shipped at room temperature with a completed MGL Requisition to arrive Monday to Friday (not on Canadian statutory holidays).  

Prenatal Specimens
Prenatal testing REQUIRES LABORATORY CONSULTATION PRIOR TO THE PROCEDURE and can only be ordered by a Medical Geneticist. Contact the laboratory at 604-875-2852 and choose the appropriate option for the Molecular Geneticist on service.
Chorionic Villi: 20 mg.
Direct Amniotic fluid: 25 mL collected in two separate tubes of equal volume.
Cultured Amniocytes: Two (2) 100% confluent T-25 flasks.
DNA extracted from prenatal specimens: 100 μL at 200 ng/μL is optimal (Minimum: 30 μL at 200 ng/μL)

Label each sample with three patient identifiers; preferably patient name, PHN, and date of birth. Ship samples by overnight courier with a completed MGL Requisition to arrive Monday to Friday (not on Canadian statutory holidays) as follows:

  • Villi – on wet ice or in media at room temperature
  • Amniocytes, Amniotic fluid, DNA – at room temperature

Shipping Address

Specimen Receiving Room 2J20

Children’s & Women’s Health Centre of British Columbia – Laboratory

4500 Oak Street, Vancouver, BC, V6H 3N1


Test Price and Billing

Testing is only available to residents of Canada, except in very specific circumstances where testing is urgent or emergent.  Payment is not required when requests are made for individuals who are insured by Health Insurance BC (administered through the BC Medical Services Plan (MSP)) AND eligible for testing according to the test utilization guidelines / policy. If the individual undergoing testing is not insured by these providers or does not meet utilization guidelines or policy, please complete a billing form; testing will only commence after receipt of billing informationTest prices can be found here.

Cautions

Molecular genetic testing is limited by the current understanding of the genome and the genetics of a particular disease, as well as by the method of detection used.

Rare single nucleotide variants or polymorphisms could lead to false-negative or false-positive results.  Some genetic abnormalities may not be detected by this assay including: some insertions and deletions, copy number variants, and chromosomal rearrangements.  This test cannot reliably detect mosaicism.  If results obtained do not match the clinical findings, consult the on-service Molecular Geneticist

A previous bone marrow transplant from an allogenic donor will result in molecular data that reflects the donor genotype rather than the recipient (patient) genotype. Consult the on-service Molecular Geneticist for approach to testing in such individuals.

Transfusions performed with packed red blood cells will generally not affect the outcome of molecular genetic testing. However, if there is no clinical urgency, the cautious approach is to wait one week post packed red cell transfusion before collecting a sample for genetic testing. Consult the on-service Molecular Geneticist as needed.

Test results should be interpreted in the context of clinical findings, family history, and other laboratory data. Errors in our interpretation of results may occur if information given is inaccurate or incomplete.